The Problem With Big Data
The Problem With Big Data
The Problem With Big Data
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NOVEMBER 2014
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The Trouble
With Big Data
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Just 30% of respondents to our new survey say their companies are
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very or extremely effective at identifying critical data and analyzing
it to make decisions, down from 42% in 2013. What gives? >>
By Michael Healey
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How effective is your organization at identifying critical data and using it to make decisions?
2015
2013
Extremely effective
9%
9%
Very effective
21%
33%
Moderately effective
48%
38%
Slightly effective
15%
16%
4%
7%
Data: InformationWeek Big Data and Analytics Survey of 266 business technology professionals at organizations with 50
or more employees in September 2014 and 257 in September 2012
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2013
Leading: Its core to how we do business, and we have a dedicated staff thats constantly modeling,
mining, and scraping to help predict and gain insight
18%
22%
Guiding: Its core to almost every part of the organization, touching sales, customer service and
operations, but were not quite there with predictive use
39%
39%
Limited: Some groups dig into nonfinancial sources, but cross-departmental analysis is limited
to financial data
35%
33%
Abacus-like: If its not tied to accounting, no one cares
6%
8%
Data: InformationWeek Big Data and Analytics Survey of 266 business technology professionals at organizations with 50
or more employees in September 2014 and 257 in September 2012
ful use of big data, cited by 31% of respondents. But lets be real: Funding complaints
always rate No. 1. In second place? Fourteen
percent have the guts to say there are more
important IT priorities, up three points from
last year. We think that response gets at the
root cause of big data dawdling: IT is often
saying, if not in so many words: Hey, CMO.
You want to own big data and digital? Fine,
have fun. Dont call us, well call you.
This stepping away of IT from a pivotal role
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In Need Of Improvement
What are the top business areas most ripe for improvement via better data analysis at your organization?
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2015
2013
Competitive intelligence
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31%
30%
27%
10%
13%
19%
18%
Customer segmentation
Inventory forecasting
12%
9%
9%
33%
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9%
Production costs
27%
26%
17%
15%
9%
11%
7%
7%
Sales forecasting
7%
8%
6%
8%
Hiring
3%
4%
Other
5%
3%
Data: InformationWeek Big Data and Analytics Survey of 266 business technology professionals at organizations with 50
or more employees in September 2014 and 257 in September 2012
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handle this tsunami of data. Deloitte Consulting called the insurance industry information
rich, knowledge poor. But its not just insurance. This moniker applies to almost every industry. You may have a crack team of business
analysts, data scientists, and Excel jockeys, but
they simply cant do the heavy lifting needed
to bring in all the information needed to yield
real knowledge.
Our survey shows that almost everyone is
pulling in their key financial, sales, and product data. Thats old-school stuff; no surprise
there. Lots of companies are also tapping their
server logs, email files, and CRM software.
However, the wheels start to come off when it
comes to unstructured data and data sources
that arent linked easily, such as phone logs,
smartphone data, and partner sales data.
All of these sources probably are accessible
and wont blow up your security model, so why
havent they been tapped? Because doing so
would require IT not data analysis skills.
This pattern pops up again in response to
our questions about external data. More than
half of enterprises in our survey analyze web
and social data, and an increasing percentage
analyzes public records. Again, this is relatively
clean data than any analyst can pull. Enterprises are struggling with data that requires
Unless youre pulling in all the data you own, residing both internally and in the cloud, plus external sources, you dont have
a complete view of your customer. However, some of the most valuable data requires significant IT effort to integrate.
Social
influence
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Geolocation
data
Social
activity
Custom data
from ERP
App
usage
data
Basic
web data
Email logs
(all)
Web
history
External data
Cloud-based data
Internal data
IoT
device
data
Text & IM
activity
Phone logs
CRM
data
Quotes
Email
marketing
Catalogue &
mailing data
Customer
service data
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What is the top barrier to successful use of big data at your organization?
2015
2013
Budget constraints
31%
11%
38%
14%
13%
11%
Lack of IT staff expertise
12%
7%
Lack of a business interest
10%
13%
8%
9%
5%
5%
No barriers exist
3%
4%
Data: InformationWeek Big Data and Analytics Survey of 266 business technology professionals at organizations with 50
or more employees in September 2014 and 257 in September 2012
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2013
Microsoft Excel
72%
65%
Enterprise search system (any brand)
31%
26%
Microsoft SQL PDW
30%
38%
informationweek.com
4%
8%
Pivotal (EMC/Greenplum)
3%
NA
Sybase IQ
3%
8%
26%
NA
Hadoop/MapReduce
14%
24%
Oracle Exadata/Exalytics
23%
21%
SAS
23%
SAP Hana
NA
2%
1%
ParAccel Analytic Database
2%
2%
Infobright
2%
4%
Other
NA
HP Vertica
12%
6%
8%
Dont know
10%
10%
Teradata EDW
7%
8%
Data: InformationWeek Big Data and Analytics Survey of 266 business technology professionals at organizations with 50
or more employees in September 2014 and 257 in September 2012
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November 2014 7
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